Ramsey has both hilarious content and delivery and can make just about anything funny. Esquivel focuses on ethnic humor, while Jeff Allen specializes in humor about family relationships.

The show lasts 90 minutes and is book-ended by the best: Ramsey and Mason. Really, the weak link here is host Heaton.

She appears to have been chosen because she was on a hit show and she’s a Christian—not because she’s a good host for a comedy show. I like Heaton, but hosting this kind of thing is definitely not her gig.

The production, distributed by Warner Home Video, was overseen by Phil Cooke, a veteran director of various religious programs.

Producers Hunt Lowry and Jonathan Bock are also Christians. Lowry is a successful producer of films such as “A Walk to Remember,” “Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood” and “Blue Collar Comedy Tour: The Movie.” Bock is president and founder of Grace Hill Media, a PR firm that handles much of Hollywood’s marketing to the religious set.

The producers are having fun with the release by declaring November “National Adopt an Unfunny Christian Month.” The cure for unfunny Christians, they say, is of course watching “Thou Shalt Laugh.”